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My poor cat has had herpes in her eyes for a long time. I have tried

everything. The antibiotic the vet gives her works for a while, but it

stops. I have tried colloidal silver and lysine. Nothing seems to work

for very long. Does anyone have any suggestions. Iam

desperate.....thanks....kimm

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I've got an eye solution I make up that really has helped the eyes of any number

of cats

I've fostered - plus my own plus even my eyes.

 

It's pretty simple: Boil a half cup of pure water, then stir in an eighth of a

teaspoon of tea

leaves (or whatever they are) out of a bag of goldenseal tea. Cover and let sit

for 15

minutes. Strain out the tea through something like a coffee filter, then stir in

an eighth

teaspoon of sea salt. This mixture keeps a few days left sitting out or a week

in the

refrigerator.

 

Take a clean cotton ball each time, dip it in the mixture and simply wipe the

cotton ball

over your cat's closed eyes, trying to drip a few drops into the corner after

you wipe.

Repeat at least 3 times a day.

 

L-lysine really seems to help herpes. I have two cats suspected of having

herpes, and I

keep them going with 250 mg. once a day or that amount twice a day if their

symptoms

are bad. I do this on a 5 days on, 2 days off basis.

 

Cindy

 

, " kimmkittykimm " <kimmkittykimm

wrote:

>

> My poor cat has had herpes in her eyes for a long time. I have tried

> everything. The antibiotic the vet gives her works for a while, but it

> stops. I have tried colloidal silver and lysine. Nothing seems to work

> for very long. Does anyone have any suggestions. Iam

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I made a good eye drop for herpes in cats using equal parts of 15ppm colloidal

silver and aloe vera gel. Stored in a dropper bottle in the refrigerator, the

gel thickens so that the drops cover the eye and stay instead of running down

the face. Medicate twice a day.

 

Judy

 

 

 

 

-

kiaradaze

Monday, April 02, 2007 9:42 PM

Re: Feline herpes

 

 

I've got an eye solution I make up that really has helped the eyes of any

number of cats

I've fostered - plus my own plus even my eyes.

 

It's pretty simple: Boil a half cup of pure water, then stir in an eighth of

a teaspoon of tea

leaves (or whatever they are) out of a bag of goldenseal tea. Cover and let

sit for 15

minutes. Strain out the tea through something like a coffee filter, then

stir in an eighth

teaspoon of sea salt. This mixture keeps a few days left sitting out or a

week in the

refrigerator.

 

Take a clean cotton ball each time, dip it in the mixture and simply wipe

the cotton ball

over your cat's closed eyes, trying to drip a few drops into the corner

after you wipe.

Repeat at least 3 times a day.

 

L-lysine really seems to help herpes. I have two cats suspected of having

herpes, and I

keep them going with 250 mg. once a day or that amount twice a day if their

symptoms

are bad. I do this on a 5 days on, 2 days off basis.

 

Cindy

 

, " kimmkittykimm "

<kimmkittykimm

wrote:

>

> My poor cat has had herpes in her eyes for a long time. I have tried

> everything. The antibiotic the vet gives her works for a while, but it

> stops. I have tried colloidal silver and lysine. Nothing seems to work

> for very long. Does anyone have any suggestions. Iam

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Try boiling water with a little salt added to it. When cool swab eyes, one

cotton ball for each eye from the inside corner out. This usually works fast

for animals or humans.

Peace, Thyme

 

 

 

************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

 

 

 

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, " kimmkittykimm "

<kimmkittykimm wrote:

>Hi kimm, What you and other responders are doing is treating the

symptom. What you need to do is treat the causitive factor or factors.

 

The cause is most likely an allergic response to food or drink and you

can test your cat, (and other domestic animals) for allergies very

easily and cheaply using natural surragate testing with applied

kinesiology. If you need any help let me know.Regards, Don Moody.

 

 

> My poor cat has had herpes in her eyes for a long time. I have tried

> everything. The antibiotic the vet gives her works for a while, but

it

> stops. I have tried colloidal silver and lysine. Nothing seems to

work

> for very long. Does anyone have any suggestions. Iam

> desperate.....thanks....kimm

>

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Herpes, though, is a virus, not a simple allergy. Cats with herpes have herpes

forever. The

symptoms flare when the cat is stressed or a little ill and the virus sheds. So,

finding what a

cat with herpes is allergic to really won't help.

 

At this point, all we with herpes cats can do is manage the symptoms. Wish there

was more,

and maybe one day someone will figure it out. My cats do manage really well with

the

additional assistance of a supplement.

 

Cindy

 

, " nasalb0ne " <donmoody wrote:

>

> , " kimmkittykimm "

> <kimmkittykimm@> wrote:

> > The cause is most likely an allergic response to food or drink and you

> can test your cat, (and other domestic animals) for allergies very

> easily and cheaply using natural surragate testing with applied

> kinesiology.>

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Hulda Clarks zapper for Virus can be done on animals.

They don't feel the zap...it's energetic and works

very well.

 

Jenny Kernan

--- kiaradaze <ckirchhoff wrote:

 

> Herpes, though, is a virus, not a simple allergy.

> Cats with herpes have herpes forever. The

> symptoms flare when the cat is stressed or a little

> ill and the virus sheds. So, finding what a

> cat with herpes is allergic to really won't help.

>

> At this point, all we with herpes cats can do is

> manage the symptoms. Wish there was more,

> and maybe one day someone will figure it out. My

> cats do manage really well with the

> additional assistance of a supplement.

>

> Cindy

>

> ,

> " nasalb0ne " <donmoody wrote:

> >

> > ,

> " kimmkittykimm "

> > <kimmkittykimm@> wrote:

> > > The cause is most likely an allergic response to

> food or drink and you

> > can test your cat, (and other domestic animals)

> for allergies very

> > easily and cheaply using natural surragate testing

> with applied

> > kinesiology.>

>

>

>

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I've heard of that name, I believe, but not much more. Do you have more details

or a Web

site? I'd love to know more. It would be great to have a way to cure a pet of

herpes or other

sort of diseases.

 

Cindy

 

, Jenny Kernan <rainysnana wrote:

>

> Hulda Clarks zapper for Virus can be done on animals.

> They don't feel the zap...it's energetic and works

> very well.

>

> Jenny Kernan

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